---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 21 Jan 1998 12:32:29 -0800
From: Sid Shniad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Forum on Labor in the Global Economy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Thailand kicking out foreign workers
The Daily Telegraph 20 January 1998
THAILAND EXPELS FOREIGN WORKERS TO OPEN UP JOBS
By Alex Spillius in Bangkok
Thailand and Malaysia are planning to repatriate up to two million illegal
foreign workers to safeguard jobs for their own nationals who are
unemployed because of the regional financial crisis.
The Thai Prime Minister, Chuan Leekpai, gave his assent yesterday to the
first stage of the scheme in which 300,000 aliens will be returned to poorer
neighbouring countries in the next six months.
"We must repatriate illegal workers to open chances for Thai labourers
who have been laid off," he said. Unemployment has increased to 1.8
million, and the labour ministry expects to compensate by returning one
million black market workers by the end of 1999.
Labourers from Burma, Cambodia, Bangladesh and, in Malaysia's case,
Indonesia were vital to the dramatic transformation of Bangkok and Kuala
Lumpur into gleaming cities dominated by sky-scrapers.
On the building sites of Kuala Lumpur, construction workers from
Indonesia earned 10 times as much as they could at home.
The migrants also pose a dilemma for South-East Asian neighbours trying
to stand together through economic calamity because off-loading workers
who cannot find jobs in their own countries creates the potential for social
unrest.
The past week has seen four riots in Indonesia as crowds have looted shops
where prices for basic foodstuffs have escalated.
However, repatriation is popular domestically as economic nationalism
bordering on xenophobia has become a common reaction to the crisis,
which has seen currencies depreciate by 300 per cent.
Bangkok also plans to slash the numbers of its 300,000 registered foreign
labourers, including 70,000 skilled employees, by refusing to renew their
work permits, the Labour Minister, Trairong Suwankhiri, said.
Doubts remain, however, that Thais and Malays would be willing to do the
menial jobs that their countries' booms gave them the luxury of rejecting.